SC orders Haryana, Faridabad Corp to remove forest encroachment; warns 'land grabbers'

New Delhi: The Supreme Court Monday asked Haryana and the Faridabad municipal corporation to remove all encroachments, totalling around 10,000 residential construction, in Aravali forest area near a village, remarking that land grabbers cannot take refuge of rule of law and talk of fairness.

A vacation bench of justices A M Khanwilkar and Dinesh Maheshwari asked the state government's officials to submit compliance report after removing all encroachments from forest land near Lakarpur Khori village in Faridabad district within six weeks.

"In our opinion the petitioners are bound by the directions given by the Punjab and Haryana High Court and the Supreme Court in orders, " the bench said in the order and made clear that the state government may consider the plea of rehabilitation independently.

"Therefore we reiterate our directions given to the state and the Faridabad Municipal Corporation and expect that the corporation will remove all encroachments on forest land not later than 6 weeks and report compliance, " the bench ordered after hearing a plea filed by five alleged encroachers led by one Sarina Sarkar against the demolition drive of the civic body.

The top court, in a virtual hearing, also directed the Deputy Commissioner of Police of Faridabad to provide police protection to the civic body officials in the demolition drive.

The bench made clear that the compliance of earlier orders, asking removal of encroachments from forest land, would be verified by it.

During the hearing, the bench took note of the submission that the illegal dwellers have no place to go and the state be directed to rehabilitate them before their eviction, saying the land grabbers cannot take refuge in the rule of law and talk of fairness.

Let the people be accommodated as soon as they are evicted, senior advocate Colin Gonsalves, appearing for petitioners, said.

"Who is asking this? Land grabbers! When you come to court you become honest and law abiding and on site, you do not do anything lawful," the bench observed.

"In the first round of litigation, we were unable to get a favourable order for getting the demolition stopped," Gonsalves said.

"We had passed an interim order in February, 2020 and since it is an encroachment of forest land, it has to be vacated and if in future, the state government wants to accommodate you that is up to the state, " the bench observed.

The bench said that it would be asking the civic body, as to why the encroachments have not been removed despite its February, 2020 order on it.

The bench asked the counsel appearing for Haryana why they have not been removed, after he replied affirmatively to the query whether the petitioners were living on forest land.

"First forest land has to be cleared. No concession with regard to the forest land. Do not give us COVID excuses. File a compliance report,: the bench said, adding that it may be a case where some are hand in glove with encroachers.

The counsel for the state said that demolition was taking place.

The bench asked Gonsalves to advise petitioners to vacate the land on their own; otherwise, the state and the municipal corporation will clear the land.

"When you come here Gonsalves, you speak of rule of law, is this rule of law. You grab forest land and then you ask a policy to be formulated," the bench said.

The bench said it was not dismissing the petition and kept it pending because it wanted its order to be complied with.

(Based on PTI feed with minor edits)

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